Grow Wild

Native Plants for West Kootenay Gardens

If you are interested in growing plants that use less water, create habitat for wildlife while helping preserve native biodiversity, look here for practical tips.

Why grow native plants?

Native plants provide many benefits in your garden and on your property. They are beautiful, adapted to our region, and provide habitat for native animals. Native plants can provide food, shade, flowers and erosion control.

The key to growing native plants successfully is a genuine interest and knowledge.

You need to know your local conditions the plants that grow in your area, and how to propagate these plants.

While there are many benefits, growing native plants “from scratch” native plants will not give you an instant garden. It takes patience. It’s important to first of all to know your site. Spend some time at the site. Take notes – what plants grow there now, is it dry or wet, sunny or shady. Then find a reference site that has similar conditions.

If you encounter plants you’re not familiar with, look them up. Plants of Southern Interior British Columbia and the Inland Northwest by Robert Parish, Ray Coupe and Dennis Lloyd is good book to start with. It has brief descriptions of each plant, the ecosystems it grows in and excellent illustrations. If you want to use an online resource E-Flora BC (http://www.geog.ubc.ca/biodiversity/eflora/) has lots of information.

Know Your Site

Learn all you can about your intended site, and work with the conditions you have rather than trying to change them.

Is it sunny, shady, dry, moist? What kind of soil does it have?

Find plants that grow in similar conditions in the wild.

Native plants for dry sites

Arrowleaf balsamroot, Balsamorhiza sagittata

Russet buffaloberry, Soopolallie, Shepherdia canadensis

Western mountain-ash, Sorbus sitchensis

Buckbrush, Ceanothus velutinus

Lewis’s mock-orange, Philadelphus lewisii

Saskatoon, Amelanchier alnifolia

Wild roses, Rosa sp.

Chokecherry, Prunus virginiana

Oregon-grape, Mahonia, Mahonia aquifolium

Native plants for sites with average moisture

Kinnikinnick, Arctostaphylos uva-ursi

False box, Paxistima myrsinites

Shrubby penstemon, Penstemon fruticosa sp.

Common camas, Camassia quamash

Native plants for wet/damp sites

Red-osier dogwood, Cornus sericea

Twinberry, Lonicera involucrata

Willows, Salix sp.

Alders, Alnus sp.

Easiest to grow native shrubs

Red osier dogwood

Willows

Chokecherry

Alders

To inquire about bringing a Grow Wild workshop to your community email us at: kootenaywild@gmail.com.

Saturday January 27, 2018

5:30 pm

Nelson Rod and Gun Club

A gala event to raise funds for the Camas Conservation Area in Millennium Park, Castlegar, BC.